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In his strongest words to date, Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, tried to quash talk that he would allow another government shutdown if he becomes Senate majority leader next year.

"Of course not. Remember me? I am the guy that gets us out of shutdowns," McConnell told CNN in an exclusive interview Wednesday.

"It's a failed policy," he said of shutdowns.

Earlier this month, Politico reported that, if selected majority leader, McConnell plans to tell the president to accept bills reining in the administration's policies or veto them and risk a government shutdown.

McConnell opposed the last shutdown, fueled by a strategy from his fellow Republican Ted Cruz, R-Texas, to only fund the government by defunding Obamacare, which passed the GOP-led House but had no chance in the Senate.

The shutdown backfired on Republicans, and after the government reopened, McConnell made clear he did not intend to go through it again, citing a Kentucky saying on the Senate floor: "There's no education in the second kick of a mule."

Still, McConnell is vowing to try to roll back Obama regulations that Republicans loathe, especially EPA rules on coal that Kentuckians see as harmful to their coal-rich economy.

He says he plans to do that, if the GOP takes control of the Senate in the midterm elections, by attaching those changes to spending bills as they move through Congress.

"One of the powers of Congress is to direct spending, and we've had an abuse of bureaucracy across the board. It's been particularly bad here in Kentucky with EPA and the coal industry, that needs to have some directions from Congress," McConnell told CNN.

"The reason Harry Reid won't allow votes on coal in the Senate is he is afraid it will pass, in other words it would actually pass with Democratic votes. We're going to have those kind of votes next year if I'm majority leader," said McConnell.

He again underscored he has no intention of taking that strategy all the way to a government shutdown -- noting he is often the veteran legislator who comes in at the last minute negotiate a way out with Democrats.

"I'm the guy that's gotten us out of the shutdowns that some of our members have pushed us into in the past," said McConnell.

But he also cautioned, "That does not mean that you should send the president a total blank check with no restrictions at all on how the money is spent."